Library /sys$common/syshlp/HELPLIB.HLB  —  SQLMOD72  SQLMOD Command Line, Arguments  ARCHITECTURE
    Syntax options:

       ARCHITECTURE=GENERIC
       ARCHITECTURE=HOST
       ARCHITECTURE=EV4
       ARCHITECTURE=EV5
       ARCHITECTURE=EV56
       ARCHITECTURE=PCA56
       ARCHITECTURE=EV6
       ARCHITECTURE=EV67
       ARCHITECTURE=EV68
       ARCHITECTURE=EV7

    For improved performance of generated code, the ARCHITECTURE
    command line qualifier can be used on OpenVMS Alpha systems. The
    ARCHITECTURE qualifier is ignored on Itanium systems.

    The ARCHITECTURE qualifier specifies the lowest version of the
    Alpha architecture where this code will run. This allows the
    compiler to generate more efficient code, with the tradeoff that
    code may not run on older systems.

    All Alpha processors implement a core set of instructions and, in
    some cases, the following extensions:

    o  Byte/word extension (BWX) - The instructions that comprise the
       BWX extension are LDBU, LDWU, SEXTB, SEXTW, STB, and STW.

    o  Square-root and floating-point convert extension (FIX) - The
       instructions that comprise the FIX extension are FTOIS, FTOIT,
       ITOFF, ITOFS, ITOFT, SQRTF, SQRTG, SQRTS, and SQRTT.

    o  Count extension (CIX) - The instructions that comprise the CIX
       extension are CTLZ, CTPOP, and CTTZ.

    o  Multimedia extension (MVI) - The instructions that comprise
       the MVI extension are MAXSB8, MAXSW4, MAXUB8, MAXUW4, MINSB8,
       MINSW4, MINUB8, MINUW4, PERR, PKLB, PKWB, UNPKBL, and UNPKBW.

    The Alpha Architecture Reference Manual describes the extensions
    in detail.

    The keyword specified with the ARCHITECTURE qualifier determines
    which instructions the compiler can generate and which coding
    rules it must follow.

    o  GENERIC - Generate instructions that are appropriate for all
       Alpha processors. This option is the default and is equivalent
       to /ARCH=EV4.

    o  HOST - Generate instructions for the processor that the
       compiler is running on (for example, EV56 instructions on
       an EV56 processor, EV7 instructions on an EV7 processor, and
       so on).

    o  EV4 - Generate instructions for the EV4 processor (21064,
       20164A, 21066, and 21068 chips). Applications compiled with
       this option will not incur any emulation overhead on any Alpha
       processor.

    o  EV5 - Generate instructions for the EV5 processor (some 21164
       chips). (Note that the EV5 and EV56 processors both have the
       same chip number - 21164.) Applications compiled with this
       option will not incur any emulation overhead on any Alpha
       processor.

    o  EV56 - Generate instructions for EV56 processors (some 21164
       chips). This option permits the compiler to generate any
       EV4 instruction plus any instructions contained in the BWX
       extension. Applications compiled with this option may incur
       emulation overhead on EV4 and EV5 processors.

    o  PCA56 - Generate instructions for PCA56 processors (21164PC
       chips). This option permits the compiler to generate any EV4
       instruction plus any instructions contained in the BWX and MVI
       extensions. Applications compiled with this option may incur
       emulation overhead on EV4 and EV5 processors.

    o  EV6 - Generate instructions for EV6 processors (21264
       chips). This option permits the compiler to generate any
       EV4 instruction, any instruction contained in the BWX and
       MVI extensions, plus any instructions added for the EV6
       chip. These new instructions include a floating-point square
       root instruction (SQRT), integer/floating-point register
       transfer instructions, and additional instructions to identify
       extensions and processor groups. Applications compiled with
       this option may incur emulation overhead on EV4, EV5, EV56,
       and PCA56 processors.

    o  EV67 or EV68 - Generate instructions for EV67 and EV68
       processors (21264A chips). This option permits the
       compiler to generate any EV6 instruction plus the new bit
       count instructions (CTLZ, CTPOP, and CTTZ). However, the
       precompilers do not currently generate any of the new bit
       count instructions and the EV67 and EV68 have identical
       instruction scheduling models so the EV67 and EV68 are
       essentially identical to the EV6. Applications compiled with
       this option may incur emulation overhead on EV4, EV5, EV56,
       and PCA56 processors.

    o  EV7 - Generate instructions for the EV7 processor (21364
       chip). This option permits the compiler to generate any EV67
       instruction. There are no additional instructions available
       on the EV7 processor but the compiler does have different
       instruction scheduling and prefetch rules for tuning code
       for the EV7. Applications compiled with this option may incur
       emulation overhead on EV4, EV5, EV56, and PCA56 processors.

    The OpenVMS Alpha operating system includes an instruction
    emulator. This capability allows any Alpha chip to execute and
    produce correct results from Alpha instructions even if some of
    the instructions are not implemented on the chip. Applications
    using emulated instructions will run correctly but may incur
    significant emulation overhead at run time.

    Of the available extension types, the Byte/word extension (BWX)
    will often be beneficial for increased performance of Rdb-based
    applications. In addition, for those Alpha implementations
    that support quad-issue of instructions (the EV6 and later
    processors), the compiler does have different instruction
    scheduling and prefetch rules for tuning code.

    For highest levels of performance of generated code, Oracle
    recommends that the ARCHITECTURE qualifier be specified with
    the keyword that most closely matches the lowest processor type
    of the machine where the program will execute.

                LANGUAGE COMPILER SUPPORT FOR ARCHITECTURE

       If specified, the ARCHITECTURE qualifier is passed on the
       command line to the specified language compiler by the SQL
       Precompiler. The language compiler being used must support
       the ARCHITECTURE qualifier and the architecture keyword
       value when the ARCHITECTURE qualifier is specified.
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